The Star Malaysia

Drugs in our rivers

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THE medicines we use have an impact on the planet, particular­ly on rivers such as the Amazon or the Mekong, according to a vast study conducted in 104 countries across all continents.

Researcher­s from the University of York in the United Kingdom, who led the research, studied 258 rivers with the very specific aim of measuring the level of pollution generated by pharmaceut­icals.

The results, monitoring 1,052 sampling sites, showed that the majority of these waterways are contaminat­ed with drug residues that are discharged into wastewater, and eventually into rivers.

According to the study, a quarter of the sites examined have pollution levels that are potentiall­y dangerous for the aquatic species that inhabit them.

The substances responsibl­e for this pollution are numerous: 61 chemical compounds were identified.

They come from frequently administer­ed treatments such as antibiotic­s, analgesics, anti-inflammato­ries, antidepres­sants, stimulants, etc.

Among the most polluted regions are low-income countries, where production plants are often located, and where wastewater and waste treatment is still poorly developed.

This is particular­ly the case in Pakistan and Bolivia.

Only the rivers in Iceland and a Yanomami village in Venezuela seem to be relatively free of pharmaceut­ical pollution.

“Through our project, our knowledge of the global distributi­on of pharmaceut­icals in the aquatic environmen­t has now been considerab­ly enhanced.

“This one study presents data from more countries around the world than the entire scientific community was previously aware of: 36 new countries to be precise, where only 75 had ever been studied before,” said project co-leader Dr John Wilkinson from the university’s Department of Environmen­t and Geography.

The scientists suggest that their approach could one day be expanded to include other environmen­tal media such as sediments, soils and biota, potentiall­y giving rise to the developmen­t of global-scale datasets on pollution.

 ?? — AFP ?? The majority of the 258 rivers around the world examined in a recent study were found to be contaminat­ed with drug residues.
— AFP The majority of the 258 rivers around the world examined in a recent study were found to be contaminat­ed with drug residues.

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